Year: 2018

  • Work & Economy

    Corporate activism takes on precarious role

    Microsoft President Brad Smith examines the impact of corporate activism during a HUBweek talk with Harvard Business Review editor Adi Ignatius.

    3 minutes
    Harvard Business Review Editor-in-Chief, Adi Ignatius talks with Brad Smith (left), President and Chief Legal Officer, Microsoft
  • Campus & Community

    When her life is over, she’ll have lived

    Harvard senior Elsie Tellier has responded to her lethal disease with courage, sadness, and compassion. But not bitterness.

    3 minutes
    Elsie Tellier.
  • Nation & World

    Straight to the heart of the story

    NPR reporter Ofeibea Quist-Arcton, who gave the Rama S. Mehta Lecture at the Radcliffe Institute, talked about seeking the untold narratives of African women.

    3 minutes
    Ofeibea Quist-Arcton and Marco Werman (left)
  • Campus & Community

    $100M gift will support sciences and math

    A Harvard alumnus and his wife made a gift of $100 million to support the University’s Science Center, enhance mathematics scholarship, and provide unrestricted resources for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

    3 minutes
    The Science Center at Harvard
  • Arts & Culture

    The great eight

    Bestowed by the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research, eight laureates received the W.E.B. Du Bois Medal at Sanders Theatre for their contributions to African and African-American history and culture.

    4 minutes
    Du Bois Medalists
  • Campus & Community

    Champion of equity and social justice

    For almost three decades, Joan Reede has made diversity and inclusion part of Harvard Medical School’s mission.

    11 minutes
    Joan Reede
  • Science & Tech

    New tool aids in sensing magnetic fields

    In their quest to build a tool that uses atomic-scale impurities in diamonds to sense magnetic fields, a pair of Ph.D. candidates from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences have developed a method that can simultaneously detect magnetic fields in various directions: “It’s like listening to four FM radio stations at once and having…

    4 minutes
    Jenny Schloss and Matthew Turner.
  • Nation & World

    Harvard admissions trial begins today

    As Harvard prepares to defend its admissions policies in U.S. District Court in Boston Oct. 15, the University’s new president delivered an unambiguous message: “The College’s admissions process does not discriminate against anybody.”

    9 minutes
    Overviews of Harvard Yard Memorial Church, Memorial Hall and Widener Library.
  • Health

    Study signals a limit to cancer’s complexity

    New findings on cancer driver mutations creates hope for targeted therapy. “It appears there is a limit to cancer’s complexity,” says one of the study’s researchers, Martin Nowak of Harvard University.

    3 minutes
    Martin Nowak.
  • Arts & Culture

    From the page to the stage

    Composer and writer Min Kahng talks about how he created his musical “Four Immigrants” in advance of his Harvard visit.

    6 minutes
    “The Four Immigrants: An American Musical Manga”
  • Campus & Community

    New faculty: Lauren Williams

    The Gazette sits down with Lauren Williams, the second woman to be tenured in Harvard’s Math Department and the Seaver Professor at the Radcliffe Institute.

    5 minutes
    Lauren Williams.
  • Campus & Community

    Harvard’s sacred spaces

    New and old sacred spaces at Harvard encourage pause and reflection, for religious and mindful communities alike.

    9 minutes
    Yaseen Eldik and Sanaa Nadim pray.
  • Campus & Community

    After the inauguration, the celebration

    The installation of Larry Bacow was followed by a giant block party in the Old Yard, with the entire Harvard community invited.

    8 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Bacow: ‘I am delighted to begin’

    Larry Bacow was inaugurated as Harvard’s 29th president on Friday, the culmination of a two-day celebration that drew together faraway friends, colleagues from other universities, and members of the Harvard community for a range of events that ended with a block party.

    8 minutes
  • Health

    Faith-based approach in battling malaria

    Harvard Divinity School and the Harvard Chan School came together to discuss how education, trust, and acknowledging the role of faith in community members’ lives is crucial to helping curtail malaria in Africa.

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    HUBweek returns with fresh ideas

    Harvard University, The Boston Globe, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology are partnering again to present HUBweek, an idea festival. HUBweek brings together individuals and groups pushing the bounds of innovation in their industries.

    4 minutes
  • Arts & Culture

    Why did Jill Lepore write an epic of U.S. history? It’s a long story

    Lepore speaks with the Gazette about our shared past, her central argument, Supreme Court fan mail, and more.

    10 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Welcoming No. 29

    Larry Bacow will be officially installed as Harvard’s 29th president on Friday.

    3 minutes
  • Arts & Culture

    The poetic perspective

    Amanda Gorman, the inaugural U.S. youth poet laureate and a Harvard junior, wrote a poem for Harvard President Larry Bacow’s inauguration based on the University’s history, Bacow’s love of running, and his approach to the job that emphasizes the long-term nature of achievement and the importance of working together toward change.

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    A pioneering mind for the power of design

    As a sophomore at Wellesley College, Adele Fleet Bacow was attracted to architecture and art. Soon, after enrolling in a course on urban sociology, she found a passion that combined…

    8 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    The down side to wind power

    Researchers have determined that large-scale wind power would require more land and cause more environmental impact than previously thought.

    6 minutes
    wind farm
  • Campus & Community

    Larry Bacow’s listening tour

    New Harvard President Larry Bacow has been on a listening tour in advance of his inauguration Oct. 5.

    26 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    A cautionary tale for Silicon Valley

    John Carreyrou, the reporter who broke the story about the problems of the blood-testing company Theranos, explains the rise and fall of the Silicon Valley firm, and sees it as a cautionary tale.

    4 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Crunch time for the human race

    Astrophysicist and cosmologist Martin Rees discusses his new book, “On the Future: Prospects for Humanity,” and shares his thoughts on climate change, artificial intelligence, robotics, and more.

    7 minutes
    astrophysicist and cosmologist Martin Rees
  • Nation & World

    A troubled, but perhaps stronger, Europe

    A panel of foreign policy analysts assesses the deeply strained relationship between the U.S. and Europe and consider what the future holds.

    7 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    400 students make Harvard history

    Harvard Extension School’s inaugural convocation filled a need to honor all students, particularly the online and distance learners, for their academic milestone after being admitted to a degree program.

    4 minutes
    Huntington D. Lambert, dean of the Division of Continuing Education and University Extension
  • Campus & Community

    Joseph John Harrington, 69

    Professor Harrington helped improve the quality of life in communities with problems with clean drinking water and sanitation.

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Don Craig Wiley, 57

    Professor Wiley was one of the most influential molecular-structural biologists of the late 20th century.

    6 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Soft robotic arm acts as extension of human hand

    Scientists at the Wyss Institute and colleagues have created a highly flexible soft robotic arm, giving biologists intuitive control over a module by wearing a glove equipped with wireless soft sensors that respond to their own hand and finger movements.

    5 minutes
    Soft robotic arm
  • Science & Tech

    Why your online data isn’t safe

    With a spate of massive data privacy breaches in the last two years, Harvard Law Professor Urs Gasser, executive director of the Berkman Klein Center, discusses whether regulating big tech is the answer.

    7 minutes